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Former mob boss finds God in prison, walks away from 'evil lifestyle': 'My faith is rock solid'

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Former mob boss finds God in prison, walks away from 'evil lifestyle': 'My faith is rock solid'

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As a child, Michael Franzese suspected his father was in the mafia.

“My dad took me and my mom one day to my grandmother’s house on Long Island,” the Brooklyn native recalled to Fox News Digital. “I was probably four or five years old at that point. We hadn’t seen him for a couple of days. . . . He was unshaven. My dad had a very heavy beard. His right-hand guy, who I called Uncle Joey, was out on the porch. He was sitting on the steps, watching like a guard.”

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“My dad came in and hugged my mom,” the 73-year-old shared. “He talked to her for a minute, then came over and hugged me… and then he left. It was strange to me. Nobody explained anything to me. But it turned out the family was at war. My dad couldn’t stay home. He was so high-profile that he couldn’t escape it. He was always getting arrested, always getting indicted. We had law enforcement around us all the time. I experienced it in school, I experienced it everywhere. It was my whole life.”

FORMER UNDERCOVER AGENT RECALLS INFILTRATING THE HELLS ANGELS: ‘A DANGEROUS GAME TO PLAY’

Former New York Mafia boss Michael Franzese is sharing his experience in the docuseries “American Godfathers: The Five Families.” (Max Mason-Hubers / Newspix via Getty Images)

Franzese, who would go on to follow in his father’s treacherous footsteps as a mob boss, is now speaking out in a new docuseries premiering on The History Channel, “American Godfathers: The Five Families.” The special, executive produced and narrated by “Sopranos” star Michael Imperioli, explores the rise and fall of New York City’s five mafia families.

“American Godfathers: The Five Families” is executive produced and narrated by “Sopranos” star Michael Imperioli.  (Getty Images)

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Franzese is the author of several books, including “Blood Covenant.”

“It’s not a romantic life,” said Franzese. “It’s a bad life. I even say it’s an evil lifestyle, because families are destroyed. . . . My own family was destroyed.”

John “Sonny” Franzese hobnobbed with Frank Sinatra and befriended Marilyn Monroe. (Bob Koller/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)

Franzese’s father, John “Sonny” Franzese, was the former underboss of the Colombo Crime Family. The renowned tough guy was a big spender who hobnobbed with Frank Sinatra and befriended Marilyn Monroe before a bank robbery conviction later made him the nation’s oldest federal inmate.

Christina “Tina” Franzese walks out of a grand jury witness room at U.S. District Court in Brooklyn on Nov. 28, 1973, holding audio tapes. Her son, Michael Franzese (light pants), walks behind his mother carrying a tape recorder. Grand jury witness and auto salesman Jerome Zimmerman of East Meadow follows behind. The three appeared to testify in the John “Sonny” Franzese case.  (Jim Nightingale/Newsday RM via Getty Images)

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Franzese had big dreams of being a doctor, but the seductive life of crime came calling. He was a pre-med student at Hofstra University when he made an offer the patriarch couldn’t refuse.

“My dad got a 50-year prison sentence for allegedly masterminding a nationwide string of bank robberies,” Franzese explained. “. . . It was a turning point for me. My dad’s 50 years old. If he doesn’t get out, he’s going to die in prison. I felt an obligation to help him out.”

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Organized crime figure John “Sonny” Franzese being brought into Brooklyn Federal Court in New York after being picked up by FBI agents on April 12, 1966. (Dick Kraus/Newsday RM via Getty Images)

“I finally said, ‘Dad, I’m not going to school. I’m going to help you. You’re going to die in prison,’” Franzese reflected. “That’s when he said to me, ‘If you’re going to be on the street, I want you on the street the right way.’”

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Franzese was 21 when he joined “the life.” On Halloween night 1975, Franzese became a “made man.”

Michael Franzese (right, seen here with his father) became a “made man” on Halloween night, 1975. (Courtesy of Michael Franzese)

During his initiation ceremony, the 24-year-old’s finger was cut with a knife. He cupped his hands, and a photo of a saint rested on his palms. The picture was lit on fire. As it burned, Franzese was told, “Tonight, you are born again into a new life. Betray your brothers, and you’ll die and burn in hell like the saint is burning in your hands.”

Once Michael Franzese was initiated, he was in charge of 300 soldiers. (Courtesy of Michael Franzese)

Franzese immediately went to work. He became in charge of 300 soldiers, Esquire reported. According to the outlet, he primarily focused on tax scams. As the “Yuppie Don,” Franzese claimed he generated $5 million to $8 million a week at the height of his mafia career.

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Sonny Franzese and his wife Tina are seen here leaving their son’s hearing in New York, circa 1985.  (Newsday file/Newsday RM via Getty Images)

“I had my first million within two years of being a made man,” Franzese explained. “I made a significant amount of money throughout the latter part of my 20s and into my early 30s. I was quick. I was fortunate. I knew how to use that life to benefit me. I had a lot of success. I wanted to prove myself and be a good provider for my family.”

“I had my own jet plane,” he said. “I had a helicopter. I had a house in Florida, New York and California. I had my own racquetball court. And I had 300 guys under me, ready to do anything I’d tell them to do.”

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Michael Franzese, seen here in 1985, was called the “Yuppie Don” and “The Mafia Prince” by the press.  (Jim Cummins/Newsday RM via Getty Images)

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According to reports, Franzese made millions masterminding a gasoline tax swindle. As the “Mafia Prince,” he was “one of the highest earners the mob had seen since Al Capone.” He was also featured in Fortune Magazine’s list of the “Fifty Most Wealthy and Powerful Mafia Bosses.”

Michael Franzese (left) is seen here arriving at the District Federal Courthouse in Uniondale, Long Island. (Dennis Caruso/NY Daily News via Getty Images)

“I was so indoctrinated into the life,” Franzese admitted. “It’s not something you ever think of walking away from. I never even gave that a thought. But I became a major target. I was arrested 18 times. I had seven indictments. I had five trials that I went to. I was a constant target of law enforcement.”

In 1984, he fell in love with Camille Garcia, a dancer from California. He began to question his future with the mob.

Michael Franzese fell in love in 1984. From that point on, he began questioning his role within the mafia. (Courtesy of Michael Franzese)

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“I knew the life was bad,” he said. “My mother spent 33 years without a husband. When she passed away in 2012, I can only say her relationship with my dad was ugly, because she blamed him for everything that went wrong in her life. My sister died of an overdose at 27. My older brother was a drug addict for 25 years. My other sister wasn’t mentally stable. She passed away at 40.”

Michael Franzese and Camille Garcia married in 1985. (Angela Weiss/WireImage/Getty Images)

“So here I am, falling in love with this girl,” he said. “I said to myself, ‘What am I going to do, marry her and put her through the same thing? I’m a target. I’m going to end up dead or in jail. My family was a warring family. Why am I going to do this to her?’”

In 1985, Franzese and Garcia married. That same year, he was charged in both Florida and New York in connection with his gasoline tax swindle. He pleaded guilty to one count of racketeering conspiracy and one count of tax conspiracy. Franzese was sentenced to 10 years in prison, but released on parole after nearly four years. He was sent back to federal prison for four more years for violating his probation.

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Michael Franzese’s mugshot from 1993. (Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Department/Getty Images)

During his time behind bars, a prison guard handed a frustrated Franzese a Bible. It made a difference.

Between 1991 and 1994, Franzese turned to a different kind of life.

Michael Franceze was portrayed by Joseph Bono in the Martin Scorsese film “Goodfellas,” which starred Ray Liotta, Robert De Niro, Paul Sorvino and Joe Pesci. (Dirck Halstead/Getty Images)

“My wife is a strong Christian,” he explained. “My mother-in-law was a very strong Christian . . . I read that Bible inside and out . . . I came to the conclusion that Christianity was true and real. The church that married my wife and me, the pastor, and all the people there rallied behind her and my babies at the time. They sent me books to prison. They were just very good to my family. It gave me something new to believe in. It gave me hope.”

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Franzese walked away from the mob for good in 1995. Today, he’s a born-again Christian.

Today, Michael Franzese, a published author, gives talks across the globe about his past. (Jerritt Clark/WireImage/Getty Images)

“The bottom line is I believe in Christianity – 100%,” he said. “I’m not the best Christian, but my faith is rock-solid. Nobody can change that for me.”

John “Sonny” Franzese’s mugshot, circa 1990.  (Bureau of Prisons/Getty Images)

“It was difficult,” he shared. “I took an oath. I didn’t want to disappoint my dad. But I chose her, my wife. I put this whole plan together to walk away without hurting anybody. I didn’t want to join the government. I didn’t want to enter a witness-protection program. So I had a very difficult path to walk on without hurting my former friends. I also had to convince the government I was out of the life. People got mad at me and put a contract on my life. My father practically disowned me. Feds were all over me. They wanted to make a major witness out of me. . . .But we got through it.”

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Franzese stressed that he “didn’t put anybody in prison.” He also made few enemies during his reign. But for 10 years, he and his father were estranged.

Sonny Franzese died in 2020. He was 103. (Jeffrey Basinger/Newsday via Getty Images)

“I kept sending him messages, saying, ‘Dad, I’m not going to hurt anybody. Don’t even listen to what the feds are saying,’” said Franzese. “But everybody says that . . . and they end up on trial testifying. It took about 10 years until he realized, ‘He’s not hurting anybody.’”

Franzese and his family moved to California to evade death threats, Esquire reported. He never went to the same restaurant twice, didn’t put his home or utilities under his name and avoided nightclubs. In time, he “outlasted everyone.”

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“Everybody I know is dead or in prison,” said Franzese. “Mostly dead now.”

Michael Franzese is seen here with his family in Los Angeles. (Kyle Espeleta/FilmMagic/Getty Images)

Today, Franzese has many regrets. But carving a new path for himself isn’t one of them.

“There are things I did or witnessed, saw – I wish they never happened,” he said. “I lost friends, close friends. I regret that my dad and I had a little bit of a falling out . . . it was never the same. 

“There are a lot of regrets, but it was part of what we believed in. It doesn’t mean that every guy in this life was horrible. There were a lot of good guys. . . . We felt we were doing good things at that point. We took an oath and felt it was honorable. We thought it was respectable, but our minds were not.”

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The History Channel’s “American Godfathers: The Five Families” premieres Aug. 11 at 8 p.m.



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Professor slams ‘sneaky approach’ to oppression-based teaching of American history: ‘fantastically false’

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Professor slams ‘sneaky approach’ to oppression-based teaching of American history: ‘fantastically false’

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A professor and author who penned a book rebutting much of the modern teaching of American history in classrooms nationwide told Fox News Digital that today’s curriculum intentionally presents Western culture in a negative light.

Wilfred Reilly is the author of “Lies My Liberal Teacher Told Me” and an associate professor of political science at Kentucky State University. He said his book is a response to “Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong,” Howard Zinn’s “A People’s History” series, as well as other left-wing curriculum like the 1619 Project.

“There are all these books that try to do two things really,” Reilly said. “One is [to] present Western culture as probably the worst culture in the history of the world, and the other is kind of take this sort of sneaky approach to that by saying like, ‘and I bet you didn’t know these facts, these hidden facts that they’re not telling you in school.’”

Wilfred Reilly speaks with Fox News Digital about his book, “Lies My Liberal Teacher Told Me,” in December 2025. (Fox News Digital)

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Reilly takes issue with what he sees as an often oversimplified and non-contextualized curriculum regarding colonialism and slavery, among other topics.

BOMBSHELL REPORT EXPOSES ‘DEEPLY CONCERNING’ MIDWEST UNIVERSITY INITIATIVE PUSHING FAR-LEFT K-12 LESSON PLANS

So, I actually responded to what we’re actually learning by looking through these guys, like the 1619 curriculum, and kind of focusing on what they got wrong from the left,” said Reilly.

In the case of slavery, Reilly noted that modern educators are teaching only a sliver of the whole story.

“What we’re teaching is a focus on kind of the latter part of the Atlantic slave trade, which was one of about 20 global slave trades,” he said. “And the reason that we’re teaching this is because it allows the pedagogue, the professor or the teacher, a chance to segue into the modern oppression of Black people. That’s it. That’s why that’s a focus.”

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Conservatives, and critical historians, have generally argued that the 1619 Project distorted the true history of the U.S. with many of Nikole Hannah-Jones’ claims, but the mainstream media has largely turned a blind eye to negative feedback. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

CRITICS SAY K-12 ETHNIC STUDIES PUSH TEACH STUDENTS ABOUT CISHETERONORMATIVITY, BLACK PANTHER PARTY

Native American history also lacks critical context, according to Reilly.

“I think the current presentation of Native Americans would be that they were peaceful, Gaia-worshiping people who were intentionally exterminated by the Europeans, and that’s fantastically false,” said Reilly.

“The Natives were people who had their own motivations, incentives, and drives, and who often competed very successfully with the Europeans,” he continued. “They were also some of the greatest warriors in history, especially the Plains Indians, on par with the Mongols. The Indian Wars took 400 years. The United States is 2% Native today. I mean, so the depiction is just completely factually false.

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Colonialism, he said, isn’t unique to the United States, either.

Blackfoot People Native Americans dressed in full ceremonial traditional clothing at an annual stamppage, Browning, Montana, around 1930. (Herbert C. Lanks/FPG/Archive Photos/Getty Images)

“Most countries, from time to time, engaged in international wars and took land,” he said. “This was not simply something that White countries did.”

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Like the Mongol and Persian Empires, according to Reilly, White Europeans conquered land, which was completely normal throughout most of history.

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“Anyway, in that world, White colonialism, European colonialism, was just one variant on if you invite us in as a partner or if we win a war with you, we’re going to take some land, and we’re going to impose external governance on that land. No one thought of the imposition of external governance as evil.”

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FBI disrupts alleged ISIS-inspired New Year’s Eve attack plot targeting NC grocery store, fast food restaurant

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FBI disrupts alleged ISIS-inspired New Year’s Eve attack plot targeting NC grocery store, fast food restaurant

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FIRST ON FOX – The FBI disrupted an alleged plot to attack people inside a grocery store and fast food restaurant in North Carolina on New Year’s Eve in support of the Islamic State terrorist group, prosecutors revealed Friday. 

Christian Sturdivant, 18, of Mint Hill — a town outside Charlotte — was arrested and charged with attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina Russ Ferguson said. 

“The FBI and our partners continued working 24/7 over the holidays protecting the American people, and this case out of Charlotte foiling another alleged New Years Eve attacker is the latest example of their tremendous work,” FBI Director Kash Patel said in a statement to Fox News Digital. “Our teams quickly identified the threat and acted decisively — no doubt saving American lives in the process. Thanks to our Joint Terrorism Task Force and regional partners both in New York and Western North Carolina for their efforts.” 

GLOBAL WAVE OF TERROR PLOTS SPARKS NEW ALARMS OVER THE WEST’S GROWING VULNERABILITY

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Christian Sturdivant, the 18-year-old suspect from Mint Hill, N.C., who is accused of plotting an attack on New Year’s Eve in support of ISIS. (Gaston County Sheriff’s Office)

Prosecutors said the alleged plot was foiled after Sturdivant recently began communicating online with an individual he “believed to be affiliated with ISIS but in reality was a government online covert employee,” who is referred to in a criminal complaint as “OC.” In one of the communications on Dec. 14, Sturdivant allegedly sent the OC an image of two hammers and a knife.

“During his online communications with the OC, Sturdivant said, ‘I will do jihad soon,’ and proclaimed he was ‘a soldier of the state,’ meaning ISIS,” the U.S. Attorney’s Office said. 

“In subsequent online communications with the OC, Sturdivant indicated that he planned to attack a specific grocery store in North Carolina and discussed plans to purchase a firearm to use along with the knives during the attack,” it added. 

Prosecutors said law enforcement seized from Sturdivant’s bedroom “a blue hammer, a wooden-handled hammer, and two butcher knives hidden underneath the defendant’s bed.” On the right is a note titled, “New Years Attack 2026,” that prosecutors said law enforcement found during a Dec. 29, 2025 search of Sturdivant’s residence in Mint Hill, N.C. (United States Attorney’s Office for the Western District of North Carolina)

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Ferguson said during a press conference on Friday that the attack was planned to take place in Mint Hill and the suspect worked at a Burger King.

“He talked about where he was planning to do this attack, which was at a grocery store and a fast food restaurant in Mint Hill. Places that we go every day and don’t think that we may be harmed,” Ferguson added.

He was preparing for jihad, and innocent people were going to die. And we were very, very fortunate they did not,” Ferguson also said, later adding, “I can tell you from his notes he was targeting, Jews, Christians and LGBTQ individuals.”

TEXAS MAN CHARGED WITH ATTEMPTING TO PROVIDE MATERIAL SUPPORT TO ISIS IN FEDERAL TERRORISM CASE

Law enforcement seized from Sturdivant’s bedroom a list of targets, as well as tactical gloves and a vest allegedly acquired as part of his planned attack. (United States Attorney’s Office for the Western District of North Carolina)

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Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement that, “This successful collaboration between federal and local law enforcement saved American lives from a horrific terrorist attack on New Year’s Eve.”

“The Department of Justice remains vigilant in our pursuit of evil ISIS sympathizers — anyone plotting to commit such depraved attacks will face the full force of the law,” she continued.

Prosecutors said a law enforcement search of Sturdivant’s residence on Dec. 29 uncovered various handwritten documents, one of which was titled “New Years Attack 2026,” and “listed, among other things, items such as a vest, mask, tactical gloves, and two knives allegedly to be used in the attack.”

“It also listed a goal of stabbing as many civilians as possible and [the] total number of victims as 20 to 21. The note also included a section listed as ‘martyrdom Op,’ with a plan to attack police that arrived at the site of the attack so the defendant would die a martyr,” the Attorney’s Office continued. “In addition, law enforcement seized from Sturdivant’s bedroom a blue hammer, a wooden handled hammer, and two butcher knives hidden underneath the defendant’s bed.” 

Sturdivant remains held in federal custody, and if convicted, he faces a statutory maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison, prosecutors said.

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“The FBI’s mission is to protect the American people, and this case demonstrates our dedication to do everything we can to protect the residents of North Carolina. We worked closely with the Department of Justice, NYPD, Mint Hill Police Department, and our FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force partners to investigate and disrupt this serious threat of a violent attack. We will never stop working to hold people accountable who seek to harm and terrorize our community,” said James C. Barnacle, Jr., special agent in charge of the FBI’s Charlotte Field Office.

Sturdivant allegedly posted an image in early December depicting two miniature figurines of Jesus with the on-screen text that included “May Allah curse the cross worshipers,” according to court documents. (United States Attorney’s Office for the Western District of North Carolina)

The Attorney’s Office, citing the criminal complaint, said on Dec. 18, the FBI in Charlotte “received information that an individual later identified as Sturdivant was making multiple social media posts in support of ISIS, a designated foreign terrorist organization.” 

“In one social post in early December 2025, Sturdivant posted an image depicting two miniature figurines of Jesus with the on-screen text that included ‘May Allah curse the cross worshipers.’ The post is allegedly consistent with ISIS historic practice calling for the extermination of all non-believers, including Christians and other Muslims who do not agree with the terrorist organization’s extreme ideology,” the Attorney’s Office added. 

Barnacle said at a press conference on Friday that Sturdivant first came to the FBI’s radar in January 2022, when he was still a juvenile.

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“He was in contact via social media with an unidentified ISIS member overseas. Sturdivant received direction from this unidentified ISIS member to dress in all black, knock on people’s doors, and attack them with a hammer. In fact, Sturdivant did dress in all black. He left this house with a hammer, and fortunately his family stepped in,” Barnacle continued. “No charges were filed at that time. He was referred for psychological care, and he underwent psychological care.”

“This investigation highlights the very real threat posed by people who self-radicalized online and are inspired by jihadist ideologies espoused by foreign terrorist organizations,” Barnacle also said.

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We rely on the communities we serve and encourage the public to contact law enforcement when they see or hear something that doesn’t seem right. I also have this personal message – if your child, relative, friend, or neighbor is sliding into a dangerous ideology, you’ll be the first to see it. And together we can stop it. The threats we face are bigger than any one law enforcement or intelligence agency, requiring everyone who hears this message to work together to keep people safe,” he added.

Fox News’ David Spunt contributed to this report.

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Redistricting battles brewing across the country as parties compete for power ahead of 2026 midterms

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Redistricting battles brewing across the country as parties compete for power ahead of 2026 midterms

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Ahead of the rapidly approaching 2026 midterms, Republicans and Democrats in states across the country are engaged in heated redistricting battles. What started with Texas’ effort to redraw its congressional map earlier in 2025 has led to other states, including California and Missouri, to do the same.

Now, redistricting battles are shaping up in Florida, Illinois, Kansas, Maryland and Virginia.

Florida

Florida Republicans are engaged in a fight over the creation of a House map that has the potential to net the GOP several seats, The Hill reported. Currently, Republicans hold 20 of Florida’s 28 congressional districts.

Despite the fact that a Florida House redistricting panel has already met twice to begin the process, Gov. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla., and state Senate Republican leadership appear to be interested in holding off on the discussion until a special session in spring. However, some fear that this could be too late, as April 20 is the deadline for federal candidates to qualify and file paperwork.

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Florida Republicans are also facing challenges because of language in the state’s constitution that puts tight restrictions on gerrymandering, NBC News noted.

INDIANA SENATE REPUBLICANS REJECT TRUMP-BACKED REDISTRICTING PUSH, DECLINE TO MEET IN DECEMBER

Florida Republicans face challenges due to language in the state’s constitution that puts tight restrictions on gerrymandering. ( Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Illinois

Democrats could possibly pick up more seats in Illinois, but the move has gained little ground. Black lawmakers have expressed concerns that a new map could undermine minority representation, according to NBC News.

Gov. JB Pritzker, D-Ill., said his state could be forced to respond if neighboring Indiana were to move forward with its own redistricting effort. However, he later applauded Indiana when it rejected a new map.

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“Our neighbors in Indiana have stood up to Trump’s threats and political pressure, instead choosing to do what’s right for their constituents and our democracy,” Pritzker wrote on X. “Illinois will remain vigilant against his map rigging — our efforts to respond and stop his campaign are being heard.”

After Indiana rejected their map, Illinois state Sen. Willie Preston, D, urged Pritzker to drop the idea, The Hill reported, noting that others have suggested that the Prairie State is still mulling the move.

Jon Maxson, a spokesperson for Illinois House Speaker Emanuel Chris Welch, told The Hill in an email that “all options remain on the table in Illinois.”

Illinois faces a larger issue, as the November candidate filing deadline has already passed.

Trump once said aboard Air Force One he could invoke the Insurrection Act to tackle violent crime in Chicago and urged Pritzker to “beg for help,” escalating their political standoff. (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images; Talia Sprague/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

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TRUMP’S REDISTRICTING PUSH GAINS STEAM IN ANOTHER KEY STATE: ‘WE WILL STAND WITH THE PRESIDENT’

Kansas

Kansas is the other major redistricting target for Republicans.

GOP lawmakers in the Sunflower State have said that they would discuss redrawing the map when they reconvene this month. However, just last year, lawmakers tried but failed to bring the issue forward.

Kansas Republicans need two-thirds support in the Legislature to hold a special session to address the map. While State House members didn’t have enough support for the issue, Republicans were able to secure enough signatures in the state Senate, The Hill reported. Additionally, they will need to override a veto by Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly.

Kelly recently told the Kansas Reflector that she would be “surprised if they even really bring it up.”

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“I don’t think a lot has changed in terms of where legislators stand on the issue,” she added.

In November, Kansas Senate President Ty Masterson (R), who’s running for Kansas governor, claimed in a statement that “California Democrats are working overtime to silence Republicans and steal the House majority.”

“Even Governor Laura Kelly admitted that there’s a bigger risk in doing nothing. On that, we agree. States across America are standing up, and Kansas will be part of that fight,” he added.

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore holds a press conference in Oct. 2025 outside the State House in Annapolis, Maryland. (Kim Hairston/The Baltimore Sun/Tribune News Service via Getty Images))

SCOTUS ALLOWS TEXAS TO USE TRUMP-PUSHED REDRAWN CONGRESSIONAL REDISTRICTING MAP FAVORING REPUBLICANS

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Maryland

Maryland Democrats have resisted pressure to redraw maps. In November, Gov. Wes Moore, a Democrat, formed a redistricting commission to explore the issue despite a lack of appetite for the move within his own party. The commission voted in secret to move forward with the plan, to the dismay of Democrat critics.

Maryland Senate President Bill Ferguson, a Democrat, has been a vocal opponent of redistricting.

“The overwhelming majority do not want a new congressional map,” Ferguson said in a statement, according to The Hill. “They want their government focused on fostering growth, affordability, and real protections against this lawless federal Administration.”

The commission is asking the public about congressional map proposals ahead of the state’s Feb. 24 candidate filing deadline.

Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate, former Rep. Abigail Spanberger celebrates as she takes the stage during her election night rally at the Greater Richmond Convention Center on Nov. 4, 2025. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

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Virginia

In late October, just before the state’s gubernatorial election, Virginia Democratic lawmakers took a major first step in a complex political maneuver aimed at redrawing the state’s congressional map.

Democrats were able to pass an amendment to the state’s Constitution to allow lawmakers to temporarily redistrict mid-decade by 2030, The Hill noted. The amendment will need to be passed again in the spring or summer before voters can have their say. The lawmakers now have the help of additional Democrats in the state’s Legislature following the November 2025 elections.

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“Our congressional delegation is 6-5 — six Democrats, five Republicans. Ten-1 is not out of the realm,” Virginia House Speaker Don Scott said in early December, according to NBC News.

If voters approve of the referendum, lawmakers would be able to pass a new map ahead of the 2026 midterms. The Hill noted that Republicans are highly likely to challenge a new map in court.

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